Logotipo librería Marcial Pons
Two systems, two countries

Two systems, two countries
a nationalist guide to Hong Kong

  • ISBN: 9780520386754
  • Editorial: University of California Press
  • Lugar de la edición: Berkeley (CA). Estados Unidos de Norteamérica
  • Encuadernación: Rústica
  • Medidas: 23 cm
  • Nº Pág.: 234
  • Idiomas: Inglés

Papel: Rústica
43,95 €
Sin Stock. Disponible en 5/6 semanas.

Resumen

As Hong Kong is integrated into the People's Republic of China, ever fewer people in the city identify as Chinese. Two Systems, Two Countries explains why.

Two Systems, Two Countries traces the origins of Hong Kong nationalism and introduces readers to its main schools of thought: city-state theory, self-determination, independence, and returnism. The idea of Hong Kong independence, Kevin Carrico shows, is more than just a provocation testing Beijing's red lines: it represents a collective awakening to the failure of One Country Two Systems and the need to transcend obsolete orthodoxies. With a conclusion that examines Hong Kong nationalism's influence on the 2019 protest movement, Two Systems, Two Countries is an engaging and accessible introduction to the tumultuous shifts in Hong Kong politics and identity over the past decade.

1. Hong Kong Ethnogenesis
Take One: The Psychopathology of Identity
Take Two: Noncompliance Cycle
Take Three: Toward a Critique of Hong Kong under Chinese Rule
Take Four: On the Ethnicization of the Hong Kong Police Force

2. Two Systems, Two Countries: New Directions in Political
Thought in Hong Kong since 2011
From City-State
Theory to Eternal Basic Law
Self-Determination:
An Unrequited Social Contract
Hong Kong Independence
Returnism: Party Like It’s 1997
Conclusion: Hong Kong’s Political Enlightenment

3. Seeing (Exactly) Like a State: Knowledge/Power
in the Hong Kong-China
Relationship
Toward a Structuralist Orientalism
Hong Kong as Child
Hong Kong as Hysteric
Hong Kong as Outlaw
Hong Kong as Virus: One Body, Two Systems
From Knowledge/Power to Ignorance/Power to Knowledge versus Power:
The Not-So-Hidden Script of Hong Kong Policy
Conclusion: Knowledge versus Power

Resumen

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